The Science of Spice

(Jacob Rumans) #1

GARLIC


Ga


Flavour Group | SULPHUROUS COMPOUNDS | Garlic 173


BLENDS TO TRY


Use or adapt these recipes for classic
blends featuring garlic:
Niter kibbeh p32
Mbongo mix p35
Nuoc cham p50
Shichimi-togarashi p57
BBQ rub p68

RELEASE THE FLAVOUR


A damaged garlic clove releases chemicals that react together to create allicin,
the pungent compound we most associate with a “garlicky” flavour. Chopping,
crushing, and puréeing produce progressively higher amounts of allicin.

BLENDING SCIENCE


Garlic’s pungency derives mainly from its sulphur-containing flavour compounds;
these have significant cross-over with cooked meats, which also contain sulphur
compounds. Smaller amounts of gently aromatic terpenes are also present,
including limonene and sabinene. Toasting creates nutty-flavoured pyrazines.

FOOD PARTNERS


Roast lamb Before roasting, make
slits all over the joint and insert slices
of fresh garlic.

Soup Roast a foil-wrapped garlic
head in the oven, then squeeze out the
sweet pulp and add to pumpkin or other
vegetable soups.

Prawns Add to an oily marinade for
grilled or barbecued prawns.

Raw vegetables Pound garlic with
anchovies and olive oil to make the
Provençal paste anchoïade, and serve
with crudités.

Chickpeas Add roasted or raw
cloves to the mortar or blender when
making hummus.

Bitter sprouts

When garlic cloves sprout, they
become more bitter. The plant
has begun stockpiling defensive
bitter-tasting substances, such as
phenols and sulphur compounds.
Reduce bitterness by cutting out
the green shoot before cooking.

team with other
citrusy compounds:
ginger has citral,
which shares garlic’s
lemony sweetness,
and also carries heat
lemongrass
adds citrus, a sweet,
floral aroma and
gentle pepperiness

add depth with
similar compounds:
asafoetida has a
potent range of similar
sulphur compounds
chilli’s capsaicins
give depth to garlic
heat by stimulating
the tongue’s
temperature receptors

boost piney notes
with sabinene:
black cardamom
shares sabinene and
adds a nose-filling
camphor quality and
smokiness
nutmeg, mace
bring notes of earthy
sweetness

pair toasted or fried
garlic with other
pyrazine-laden
spices:
toasted sesame
intensifies garlic’s
nutty accents
wattle brings
charred wood aromas
and hints of popcorn

ALLICIN


sulphurous |
spicy | hot

LIMONENE


citrus | herby

SABINENE


woody | orangey |
piney

PYRAZINE


COMBINATIONS


nutty | toasty |
savoury

Kitchen


creativity


Garlic amplifies and unites other flavours while having its own distinctive taste
that gives depth to many savoury dishes. Essential to many cuisines, with onions
and ginger it forms the “trinity” at the heart of much Asian cooking.

Leave for 60 seconds after
crushing or chopping, so
allicin levels rise to a peak.

Vegetable oils spread the
strongest compounds while
butter aids its gentler flavours.

Uninjured cloves do not
contain allicin. Cook whole
for mild, sweet flavours.

Avoid cooking garlic
above 180°C (350°F)
to prevent bitterness.

Green shoot
has bitter
compounds

Below 180°C
(350°F)

172-173_Garlic.indd 173 13/06/2018 16:24

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